“Determining the circumstances surrounding the significant loss of life will be an important step in the mourning process for families and their journey to secure their rights to truth and justice,” he said.

IS overran swathes of Iraq in 2014, executing fighters and civilians en masse and using other forms of repression to seize and keep territory in the country’s north and west.

The mass graves may “contain critical forensic material” that could help uncover the details of these violations, as well as identify the victims, the UN said.

UN investigators in August began collecting evidence on war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide for Iraqi courts to use in trials of accused IS militants.

– Infamous sinkhole –

Out of the 202 mass graves documented in the UN’s new report, just 28 of them have been excavated and 1,258 bodies exhumed by Iraqi authorities.

Nearly half the total sites are in Nineveh province, where IS’s onetime Iraqi capital Mosul lies and where the jihadists committed mass atrocities against the Yezidi minority.

According to Iraq’s high commission on human rights, more than 3,000 Yezidis remain missing in Nineveh, in addition to another 4,000 people.

The rest of the sites are distributed in the northern regions of Kirkuk and Salaheddin, or Anbar in the west.

Some of those that have yet to be excavated are secured by Iraqi armed forces, but others remain endangered by fighting or are contaminated by explosive devices left behind by IS.

The largest, according to the report, is expected to be the Khasfa sinkhole south of Mosul, where as many as 4,000 people may have been killed.

IS has planted explosives at Khasfa, which killed a journalist and three members of Iraqi paramilitary forces last year.

After capturing Mosul, Iraqi government forces went on to oust IS from its other urban strongholds and declared victory against the jihadists in late 2017.

– ‘A full reckoning’ –

But many Iraqi families have missing relatives who they suspect may have been killed by IS, or are desperately looking for the remains of loved ones they know were executed by the jihadist group.

Their quest to uncover the truth often leads them into Iraq’s exhausting state bureaucracy.

“Families of victims must report to more than five State entities to complete the legal requirements to establish the fate of a missing person,” said the report, calling for the creation of a single body to handle the process.

Iraqis are still searching for answers on the more than one million people who went missing during the reign of strongman Saddam Hussein, which ended in the US’s invasion in 2003.

Since then, thousands more have disappeared in bloody waves of sectarian violence, then as militias became prominent across the country, and most recently as IS took over parts of Iraq.

The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, said revealing the truth behind the mass graves would be “critical to ensuring a full reckoning for the atrocities committed by IS.”

“IS’s horrific crimes in Iraq have left the headlines but the trauma of the victims’ families endures, with thousands of women, men and children still unaccounted for,” she said.